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Gilded silver vase

400/699

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

This beautiful vase is typical of the extraordinary skill of Sasanian silversmiths. The silver is gilded, and has embossed and traced decoration. The base is pierced like a strainer, and the vessel was presumably for wine. It bears images of grapevines and of two naked boys, one cutting a branch, the other carrying a basket of grapes. Birds and foxes sit amongst the vines The Sasanian empire fell in AD 642 to the attacks of the Muslim Arabs. The artists and craftsmen, however, put themselves at the disposal of the new rulers and the needs of the new religion, and it was through them that traditional Persian ornament came to have a profound influence on Islamic art. It is often difficult to determine whether a vessel is of Sasanian or early Islamic date since techniques, shapes and decoration underwent little change.

Details

  • Title: Gilded silver vase
  • Date Created: 400/699
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 18.50cm; Diameter: 10.70cm; Volume: 750.00ml; Weight: 592.40g
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: gilded; punched; embossed; pierced
  • Subject: harvesting/haymaking; tree of life; tamga
  • Registration number: 1897,1231.189
  • Production place: Made in Iran
  • Place: Found/Acquired Mazandaran
  • Period/culture: Late Sasanian
  • Material: silver; gold
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Bequeathed by Franks, Augustus Wollaston

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